asylum; naws p B BRY LISK CHIgACO, Junhewlc-(fgib-Gal. my 00cc lo of Chicago Wu“ 5"- Wllfl ti" the best years career to the National Lea. . can make Amer-lean lea e this season by becomng 0110 nrstwjgnior circuit third base. man to a batting title. 1f T011? can keen up his amaz- iflfl at the plate-he has led hi! segue since the start of the season-ha will accomplish what couldnt be done in 44 years b such stellar third seekers as Fran (Homejun) Baker, Buck Weaver, Sammy Hale, Marty McManus, Pinks’ Higgins and Red Rolfe. Cuocinelo, who was grabbed by the Pale Hose after the Boston Braves cut him adrift in 101s, still has a long road to the swat crown. The junior circuit requires a mini- mum of 400 times at bat for title contention. Tony has yet to reach the 150 mark and manager Jimmy Dykes of the White Sox shudders to think what real hot weather will do to '1 iakhil-l s urggersal o! e New Volsellds pitching m York Giant?‘ es are - ball to glmthbagk an. o. i: trig National , continue (he Wk c‘ i laféel Ott's camp y; glinreeeldd ofl eight con- mound triumphs» but 3:91p; belted out by Cincin- mui, two weeks ago the New have faltered. It a . “M days go that Volseills als‘ s?" g1 e in the S. ‘gills iivgioranu Voiselle m seeking his “ninth victory. a rc ercussion to that ‘Hamil miidmannered Mel imposed one of the etiflcst in recent major league hist- hen he assessed Voiselle S500 "m; up a soft pitch which ’. the 4.2 win of the st. Louis Joe DiMaggio’: Wife Gets Divorce LOS ANGELES, June 6 — (AP) - li/Lrs. Dorothy Arnold Di Maggie today obtained her final decree of divorce from Joe Di Maggie, for- mer New York Yankee outfielder and army air force sergeant. She was granted an interlocutory decwe over a year ago on her testimony that Di Maggio had been "cruelly indifferent" to her and had assoc- iated with his men friends in Pref- erenoe to her. Braves Sweep Doubleheader From Phils (By Thor-Canadian Press) The Boston Braves last night swept both ends of a National Lea. gue twin blll at Phlladelphlahhnnd- ing the Phillies their eighth and ninth straight defeats 15-1 and 7-3. + =l~ mpg of his action Ott said drastic measure was necessary .. Voisclle dlsobeyed pitching tlons in tiring to Johnny Cardinal outfielder, in the inning. The Glanw were the time and Hopp d to score one run and start which led to the New ior- dovlnfnlll. 5* of catcher Frankie udelphia Athletics to land Indians is being hailed the most mysterious , _ league baseball. engineered by Connie Mack. while baseball writers see vclicrc Mack may wind “(he winning end of this ction, they have too much t. for the Philadelphia leader o out on n limb right now. >lé + ‘i’- is such a revered and d. baseball man that the . are holding fine. Hayes, a .. ramental star, has figured in news before this. Earlier in season there was some hint in announcement by Mack that wasn't quite well in the Phila. camp. ' a the consecutive game cat- .; streak of Hayes was-men. ed prominently in the baseball .Mack suddenly put a damp. on diamond conjecture with - that (he A.'s were interested winning baseball games, and not individual records. uck has dealt with many a peromcntal baseball player in day. Ho had the immortal be Weddell and many another nitric star under his guidance. took Ty Cobb for the last two n of the Georgia Beach's major e career and paid him 550, a season, which is more than paid any ball player before or CE. d 3-1 nt c tradri. .. by Phil Walton Halts Pirates At Pittsburgh. Bucky Walterséiit. ched shutout ball and cloute =1 homer in the eighth inning to help. Cincinnati Reds beat Plttsburs Pirates 3.0 tonight before 13,277 N ti nal Le ue ans. ‘Walters x331 Preacher Roe ken?- the contest to a. pitchers duel and both teams went scoreless the first seven innings. Each hnrler allow. ed six hits. Cen Gables. wh0 W85 nicked for two tallies, went in in the ninth um- Roe was replmd by a pinch-hitter in the eighth. Roe struck out seven Red batters. The Chicago at St. Louis. 001V other game scheduled, was rained ou . Heath Signs it? iii ili Cobb naturally was hard to han. ~ He fought the umpires, op- slng players and not a few of own loam mates d-uriag his rmy and colorful career. Yet ck tells of an incident in which Veteran Bigleaguer May Become First Third Sacker To Win A. L. Battling Title his 38.year.old good shot at the title won last race won that season by Ty with d1 ting championships since 1901 with 3-0. down taken by the peerless Cobb. First basemen led the league seven years; second baseman five: and shorhstops third basemen, no catchers have won the title. bb had to admit he was wrong. was in the closing day-s of ~-- career and he was working ~ Mack at r gen; a season. There came a day when the Ath. its were having a difficult time lung the offerings of the Cleve- - southpaw, Walter Miller. Cobb 5 hflvine as much difficulty as " of his mates, and he finally lllrned to the bench after a lllcss hitting attempt and re- " It's impossible to hit as Pic ii Mack recalls the incident which With Indians , June 0--(AP)—-Jefl Cleveland Indians d his holdout status ing a 1046 contract , vice.president R08- h announced. C Heath, hus outfielder en $0115? Y with the Tri er eckinpaluil “m! ark b Cobb. The llillileticrmuiignxdgnzr walled until it was Cobb's turn to bat again and then he said m him: "Maybe I had better send a pinch hitter up f .- oryouT!* Mack to!!! 0f Cobb flashed t how 0 nle also!‘ sualrxinet-llat. a a W0" tgivivflhe fisltred the veteran Phila. d . elp a p o * * * this answer: been a great A “SI” Elsi’; i" with: a llngle like ism ._‘ Most gels have a ‘pin-up‘ boy Some like ‘em strong and brave | Pieter the w ll “l who u‘; qroem type COLGATE shave. Mack Iave him "Because you've "latsman. Because you never should make a statement like that. What about, m boys sitting on the bench? They're not butlnen like yqugmgwsiantheyhearyous . l such a thing barre bound a txhlnk to themse ves ‘Well, if Cobb can't hit him, what's the use oi us trying?’ '.’ Would Like Disabled Vets a In ldaiors (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, June 6—Legls. latlon requiring 5! Mn. l. Sharps, 1K G1- ‘ “$11 $010.0?" u“ w". romnolvlavom ' Y‘ I "lllllihtlilollllbvvesnvi Col ' r "card-yr. n. ~=~ adiertli - - u "l 22121.... III .-.:.-.~":'; 1:" numb: of your filly ‘Mun-s man sunu Lanna You slow-mu mam WITHOUT llf|||41||cg| f‘: bubbles sun's ' “mm-Ill! base III! hurts-etc e league a team be persons who have lost one or more legs, anns or hands, was introduced to- day Senator William Langer (Red. .D.) The regulation would become effective at the beginning of the i040 baseball season. l Shul naulnsl I‘ Gel ate null h fiaiiéikielllrusuhl un- ms’, 31.7"" '&3°i'.'l“;"i'.tu""'.l..' ‘wan-u. 15ml ' ' EULCATESHAVE it? told a reporter after introducing the blll and reading it to the Sen- a e. I Although the cm does not spec. l lflcallv mention war veterans Lan. ger, in a statement placed in the record, said many veterans who plsvled baseball in the sandiots or in igh school and collegeare “to all practical purposes" barred from professional baseball because they have lost a leg or an arm while serving their country l D ham at least 10 per‘ cent of the players oi each major, "I'm serious about this.” Lancer’ scored in their last 17 Fenway Park starts, put. the Red Sox two points Browns and one point behind Chl- cago White lonal rookie winning before 1,617 fans at Chic o nle hits to win while his mates bunched three of the five hits they got of‘! Sig Jak. thorn with a walk and two errors to score three runs to clinch victory. vbe kind to the iour.day P. third baseman. “Pooch probably will have to sit out the second game oi a lot of doublen-headers grad give those pins year by managelnshortstop Lou Boudreau of Cleveland with a mo- dest .327. Figures from the league service bureau show that Homeltun Bak. er of Connie Mack's $100,000 Phil- adelphia infield was the unior circulffs hardest hitting thir base- man. But despite a .341 average in 1912, Baker finished sixth in the Cobb . 0. Outfielders monopolize the bat- three. Like the Roolric Chalks llp 8th Straight Win (By The Canadian Press) After Dave (Boo) Ferriss wob. bled along to his eighth successive pitching victory by a 5-2 margin, Boston Red Sox zoomed into hair- line range of first division of the American League yesterday by sweeping a doubleheader from Philadelphia Athletics with a 3.2 night/cap win at Boston, The two_ply triumph, the 12th behind the third_place St. Louis Sox. Ferriss, who started his sensat- streak by whitew-ashlng the Athletics, 2.0. gave a total of 14 hits, three pass. es and hit a batter but the Ath_ letics obliged by leaving 14 run- ners on base. 80x Blank Browns Jimmy Dykes' White Sox, bat- tered into fourth place on their recent eastern tour, snapped back to shut out St. Louis Browns 4.0 ag . Orval Grove spaced eight Brow. his fifth victory ucki in the sixth and combined the Overmire Beats Tigers Frank (Stubby) Overmire, Tiger southpaw, scattered 10 Cleveland Indian hits at Detroit. to earn his fourth straight victory for Detroit 8-1. A1 Smith was charged with his fourth loss as the Tigers even- ed the series at 1.1. Doc Cramer smashed a triple with the bases loaded in the sixth inning to highlight a founrun Tiger outburst, which drove Sm.th from the mound. Leonard In Top Form Pitcher Dutch Leonard was in rare form last night at Washing- ton both at bat and in the box, shuttl out New York Yankees 4.0 wh e he and his Washington mates got to Bill Zuber for four runs. It gave the Senators two of the three games in the American League series. Leonard gave u four hits, all singles, and issu two walks. He did notbgermlt o, Yankee to reach se. P. G; A. Dpcn Tournament Starts Today (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL, June 6—Islesmere Golf and Country Club received its final grooming today. while offic- ials of the Canadian Professional Golfers’ Association breathed a prayer that the weatherman véould . A. $10,000 open starting tomorrow. The course has been lng out fairly well after steady rena of a week ago, but occasional showers have lcft it somewhat on the heavy side yet. . Jug McSpaden will be playing real Elm Ridge and Nick Wlsnock of Burlington, Vt., in ‘one three. some tomorrow. Islesmere's Stan Horne and Phil Parley of Toronto Scarborough make up another gal- lery-attracting combination. Jim I-llne ls drawn with Jules Huot of Lava .Sur.Le.Lac, and Boo Burns of Toronto Weston. Bing Crosby will alternate be- tween appearances at lvlontreal military hospitals and exhibition rounds at the course during the first two days of the tournament and P. G. A. officials admit-pos- sibly a bit ruefully-that it looks as though fire crooner is going to get as big galleries as te big. name players. rue cuaarorrmiowu ouanpmn THEATRES “MAKE Yllllll CWII BED" JACK CARSON JANB WYMAN IRENE MANNING Even if you're tied up see it! You're bound to enjoy yourself. Souris Thur. 8:45 P.M. MONTAGUI. SATURDAY 7:15 - 9:15 P.M. MATINEE 8 I. I. . with Rodvers MacKenzle of Mont.‘ f P’ Baseball Results (By The Canadian Press; AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 001 000 100-z l4 Boston 310 000 0121-5 Knerr, Gerkln and Rosac; riss and Gar-bark. Second Game: Philadelphia 100 100 000-i 6 Boston U/OC 001 11x-3 9 Flores, Berry dz George; Woods, Barrett and Walters, Garbark. Detroit 100 08-1 000-B 12 Cleveland 000 000 010-1 10 2 Overmire and Richards; Smith, Henr Klieman and Hayes. uis 000 3 Chicago 001000 00x-4 6 0 Januckl and Mancuso; Grove and Tresh. New York 000 000 000-O 4 2 Washington 000 001 3011-4 7 0 Zuber, Holcornbe, Roser and Crompton; Leonard and Ferrell. NATIONAL Lnaomr 2 0 ‘l Fer- Boston 027 022 003-15 15 0 Philadelphia 100000 000- 1 9 0 Cooper and Masi; Sproull, Cofl. man, Monteagudo and Peacock. Second Game: Boston 000 001 201-’! l0 1 Philadelphia 010 110 000-8 9 Hutchings, Hutchinson 8c Kluttz; -With Daub Sunday A ‘llhe City Softball League, com- six swing in prisinB . will action for the 1M5 season on Sun. afternoon next, it was decided at a mee officials held at the Queen bar-lotto last night. Teams entered in the league are Navy, P.W.C., and four from No. 2 ANS. here, Oflicers, Sergeants, Corporals a Airmen. Navy tan- gles with the Oflicers in e first game of the opening do ehsader with the Sergeants the in an alLAir Force tilt in the windlup encoun‘ . Much enthusiasm was in evi. dance at last night's meeting pre- sided over b President S. F. Do la and it was e consensus of opn. ion of the meeting that the lea ue would be on a ar if not somew at better than e loop that went over in such a. big manner last season. ends. Story [Written for The Canadian Pres by Sqdn. Ldr. Leslie Powell, R.C.A.F.] ABOARD AN R.C.A.F. LANCAS. TER SOMEWHERE POVER THE ATLANTIC, Jun B-(CP by wire- lessn-This is be written in the wireless operator's cabin on Z for ter of the Ghost Squadron which, with other aircraft of the‘, same squadron, took off from the Azores a few hours ago for Newfoundland and Canada, leaders in a move which will bring a number of Can- adian heavy bomber squadrons home by air. In the presence of Bomber Com- mand's chief. Air Chief Marshal g Sir Arthur Harris, and the RCA. F.'s overseas commander-in-chief, Air Marshal G. O. Johnson, we took on’ from Middleton St. George, York, the base from which the Ghost and Moose Squadrons have been operating over Europe. We have been coming by easy stages; our first stop was at an airfield in the southwest of England, where we were held up by bad weather for a few days. Forced Down At Sea I left there in B for Baker, but engine trouble forced us to crash. land in the sea just ofl the Azores, our next scheduled stop. The crew and pa all escaped into a dinghy following a magnificent landing by the pilot, Flt-Lt. Acree of Rain River, Ont. We were pic ed up by an RAF Wyatt and Mancuso. Cincinnati 000 000 012-3 B 0 , 000 000 000-0 8 d Roe, Gable; and‘ Iopez, Salkeld. | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Rochester 9 0 Baltimore 003 00x-9 11 1 Koch and Mcweeney; Hooks and Lollar. Buffalo 100 000 0-1 3 3 Jersey CltY 315000x-9 9 3 Bowman, Cellini and Mordarski; Mellis and Clawsen. Montreal 000 000 030 1-4 l0 0 Syracuse 000 003 000 0-8 4 0 Gabbard, Warren dz Todd; Katz & Just. Toronto 01 010 000 01-8 5 1 Newark 000 000 000 00-3 10 1 ' (l1 innings) Hamlin and Pruett; Drews and Taylor. i our ooo 100-Z m Second Game: Buffalo 300000000-6 ‘I I Jersey City 010032 00x—6 8 0 Gillispie, Parkhurst and Roda- kovlch; Tellier, Matthewson, and Clausen. Baseball's Big Six (By The Amied Press) Player, Club Holmes. Braves Kurowskl. Cards 39 1 Ott, Giants 4,3 1 Case, Senators :71 1 Cuccinello. W. S. 3'! Etten, Yankees 41 14o 3 w Home Runs: National league, Lombardi. Giants, 13; Amgrjggn League, Stevhens. Browns, a. Runs Batted In: National Lea. gue, Lombardi. Giants, 39; Ameri- can League. Etten, Yankees, 31. (Does not include twilight and night games). ~ lIThoCanadlanPn- The Argentine govemmen aid $150,000 for Craganour, (hi: 201g which finished first in the Dexfbv 42 years ago, but was disqualified for mlling in the "stretch. A. B. Cun- liife’s A ., was d eclared ner after the disqualification. PLANES FROM- ___<°°nilnw.q 152111.120: _1> week. That figures‘ 1 um- nsw men and ‘ifis-Flifl Planes ferried homeward in that period. W111- The D-day anniversary broad- cast of General George C. Kenny, commanding the Far East, A11- Force. ctured Japan as being re. duced y alr blows to little more inim l "menace to navigation" she . r‘ ‘ in fighting this war to a finish." Despite extreme distances to be covered from Present Pacific bases, General Kenny said glance were a0 tightening‘ the air lockade of Ja. n that e doubt- ed the foe ooul put. into thealr as many as 100 shins anywhere "south of Formosa.“ That checks closely with repeat- ed reports tq American observers in Central China. and Allied sources in the southeast Asia theatre of Japanese failure t0 re- act effectively if at all by ah- a. alnst either Chinese armies beat- n-g at the western defenses of the China-Indo China corridor or Bri- air.sea rescue launch, and arrived soon afterwards on the island of Terceira, where we were split up among other aircraft for passage ome. We were held up briefly there by hea cloud. but a few hours ago we ook off in grand weather and at this moment we are soaring through bright sunshine, catching glimpses of the sea through breaks in the clouds below. We are heading for Gander Air. field, Nfid., and Dartmouth, N. S. The phrase "somewhere over the Atlantic" is somewhat indefinite and unfair-our navigator knows exactly where we are are and tells me we are less than three hours’ flying time from Gander and prove it has just shown me the exact position on his map. Lookin out the window, I find it dlfllcu t to believe anyone knows where we are, but I have implicit faith in his skill. The navigator, incidentally, is F0. Jimmy ‘Gunn of Toronto. Other! Aboard Beside me, sending this story faster than I can write it, is the wireless operator, F0. Will Magee of New Westminster, B. C., while looking around with some interest is our skipper, Flt. Lt. Clifford Pratt of Mount Forest, Ont, Other crew members are PO. Doug Miller, Bomb Aimer, from Fort Erie, 0nt.; Sgt. Gordon flight engineer, London, .; F0. Archie Martin, - upper gunner Newcastle, 0nt.. and Flt. Sgt. Ted Dykes, tail gunner, of Edmonton. The other passenger is LAC. Hal mechanic, from Winnipeg and ter of this first wave, led by Wing Cmdr. W. Gall of Laohute, Qua, carries at least two passen ers- most of them ground s ial sts. Other squadrons of t e Canad. lan Bomber Group will shortly be following us, some in a day or two, some later, the largest mass aerial move ever attempted by the R.C.A.F‘. or the .A.F. Within a few hours, we will sight North America and soon after. wards we shall be touching down on Canadian soil. For many of us this- will be the first time in some years that we have seen Canada. The boys who bombed the will to fight out of Germany and who, in the words of bomber chief Harris, sank the Nazi navy in their spare time, are on their way home. We'll be seeing you soon, Can. ada. Would Reduce Corporate Income Tax First (By The Canadian Press) TORONTO. June 0—Reduction 11 in the corporate income tax before any change is made in the per- sonal income tax was pro sed to. day by Professor J. L. cDougall of Queen's University, Kingston, his addressing the taxation conference of the Canadian Manufacturers Association in convention here. Professor McDougall made three other suggestions: lowering of customs tariffs so foreign custom- 9" mil’ find it easier to build u credits in Canadian dollars wit which to buy our exports; rapid reduction in the excess profit ta and its abolition within three years from now; additional sales taxes as a source of revenue which offers much less encour- agement to the restriction of out. tish Empire forces mopping up in Burma. pgrxtfihan does our personal income CioySoftboll League Opens fternoon Next to games for the first two rounds: JUN!- lrroute Home From O ’seas “i3 0f 15 Planes Zombie, a Canadlambullt, Lancas- ' leheader Bill Following is the schedule of . .0. n. . 3_-Nsvy vI. Sergeants. JUL . 1—Oi!icers vs. Sergeants. Navy vs. Corporals. S-Corporals vs. Airmen. Games are to be glayed on Tues- day, Thursday and unday of each week with doubleheaders being staged on each Sunday afternoon. From Plane iReach Gander HALIFAX, J1me 6 — (C?) — Thirteen of the original 15 Lan- casters of the Ghost Squadron ‘which took off from England, early this week, arrived at Gander alr- port today and will remain over- night before beginning the last stage of their journey to Dart- mouth, N.S., tomorrow. 'I'hey are expected to arrive at Dartmouth about noon. I t l l The Tobacco of Quality Old Chum, the original r. " pipe tobacco, hos taste and quality which hove endeared if to three gen- erations. Buy o p a c k o g e cur c-oaas Syria Favors Five Power Conference By HAIG NICHOLSON DAMASCUS, June d (Reut- ers) - Jamil Mardam Bey, Syrian Of the 15 bombers that left England, one crashed a-t sea and another was held up in the Azores due to mechanical trouble. The Lancaster left in the Azores will proceed on its journey when the repairs are mode. Wholesale Grocers Meet At Winnipeg WLNNLPBG, June 6 -— (OP) — Michael Dwyer of Halifax was elected lradent of the Canadian Wholesale 5 Association at the annual meeting today. He suc- ceeds C.H. Sly of Winnipeg. W.G. Lumbers, Toronto, GH. Kitchener, Fredericton, N.S., B. Couvretto Mont/real, E S. Cooper, Winnipeg, J.M Sinclair, Regina, and. J .W.D. Robinson, Vancouver wene nrnmcd vice-presidents. Dir- ectors include L. Pettigrew, Que- bec City. The meeting passed a resolution urging the Government. to remove all restrictions which may interfere with the development of individual enterprise and initiative at the earl- iest possible moment. Damaged Ships e Reach Halifax Was Mirna: N0 Ships ' Sunk Or Lives Lost, Officer Says- HALTJFAX, June 6 - (C?) Twenty-two ships of a ‘TB-shill 0°11‘ voy making its way from Britain to North America have arrived in Halifax after they were damaged in a multiple collision which oc- curred as they took a CO-deflfee Q swerve to dodge a field of icebergs in the fog-bound Atlantic off the Newfoundland banks. Amon the ships dammed in a series o crashes which occurred within a 10-minute period. Wu the Canadian victory freighter, Columbia which arrived in P0" wit-h her bow bashed in. Three of the vessels hit "icebergs. "It is one of the greatest miracles of the Atlantic that no ships were sunk or lives lost." said m Officer of one of the surviving ships. For an entire week the convoy headed for North America lost in a thick fog. Visibility was barely more than 200 feet on Sunday afternoon May 26. when one of the leading freighters signalled that she had hit an iceberg. There were instant messages from the commodore to alter course, but some of the ships were slower than others in making the 90-degree turn and vessel after vessel crashed into one another. Others missed collision by so little that men on watch "held their breath and prayed" as one crew- man put it. Started Confusion A British Liberty ship, Ithe Samstrall, hit the first of nine sighted icebergs and started the confusion that followed. "The air was splitting with the hooting oi fog horns. The wireless boards were jumping with signals." The crew of one ship dragged out a French band horn to blow as a warning signal after its fog horn mechanism had broken down. Despite the confusion there was no panic among crew members, umbia said. Had the Canadian merchantman not been brought nearly to a atop and at the some time swerved sharply to starboard, an approaching ship would have struck it amidshlps and possibly sunk the freighter. A hole was left in the port bow of the Fort Columbia and the steel deck ad- joining it buckled. - Arthur Greenwood, Captain Banfz of the Fort Col- Air Foreign Minister and acting Prime Minister, today welcomed a French proposal for discussion of Middle East problems at a conference be- tween the “Big Five" and the countries concerned. Gen. de Gaulle has proposed a conference among Britain, the United States, France, Russia and China but Britain has suggested only an Anglo-American-French conference on the Franco-Levant- ine dispute. Reveal: Casualties In Torpcdoing (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, June 6—Names of seven casualties, including five dead and two who are missing and presumed dead in the torpedo at- tack on the Canadian frigate Che. bogue in mid-Atlantic last Decem. bcr, were released today by Naval Service Headquarters. Four ratings were listed as kill. ed in the attack and another died later of wounds. In addition, the Navy said 10 men were wounded in the attack, but their names were not given. The list and next-of_kin:- Dead:— Carl, Charles Gordon, Sigmn, Mrs. Dena Carl (mother), Meadow Lake, Sask. Fish, George Henry, Cook (S), Mrs. Elizabeth Fish (mother), Grande Rapids, Alberta. Gaal, Joseph Stephen, AB., Mrs. Charles Goal (father), m, Grey St, Brantford Ont. Stoddart Clarence John, Stoker l, Mrs. Aieda Stoddart (mother), Mill St, Chesley, Ont. Died of Wounds:- Smlth, Larry Douglas, ERA. 4th| class, Mrs. Dorothy Smith (wlfe).‘ Brantford, Ont. Missing, Presumed Dead:- Sxnith, Richard Alfred, Stoker 1, Mrs. Bernice Smith (wife), Tor. nto. Reid, Daniel MacFarlane Mo. Leod, LS, Mrs, Bertha May Reid (wife), 13B North Sh, Halifax. 8 New Peers Are Created LONDON. Juno s - (or) _l 318111 new Peers were created, 1n- Ciud-lllk three Labor menluers, ill the traditional parliamentary dis- solution honors today. The list included companions-ol- ‘honor awards for Clélllcllt 8.. Al- tlcc. Lab”! party lcuoer, unulliei‘ ulu- mincnt Labor member who once lield oifioe 1n the Coalition Govern- inent une high honor awarded was th. advancement of Lord Addison iron. Baron to Viscount. Munltion Minister iron) 1910-17, he (mgr b, came a Health Mixilster m the Luv or Government itwently he wa; ,_ (number of tllc Puiildzncnisry cc- legaiion which mspccuu the Bu;- liemvald horror camp. 'l.‘lie new peers urea Lilli. La or . David Qulbell, one tlme brick- layer, who represented Ilrigg, Lill- colnshire . W F. Jackson member for Bu- con and ftadnor, Wales. AO. Wulkden, a former radon, clerk. the member for BflSlDl Souan Conservative: Capt. Harold Balfour, resident minister in West Africa and for- mer Under Secretary of State for. Si: George Qourthope, member for l-tyc. Si: Douglas Hacking, member for, Ciruley. ' Slr Edward Grigg, resident min- 151.4? in the Middle East. lnbcrnl National Rt. Hon. Ce- Po Lambert, moni- ber for South Melton, Devon Al‘ are saunter’ Barons except Mr. Lambert who was made Vis- Most seriously damaged of the ‘convoy ships was the Samstrail which continued on to New Yorki |wlth a 14-foot long hole in herl i rams, June s x Sanetta also hit icebergs but es-ltfjfil side. The British freighter. Em- pire Yukon and Dutch tanker -caped extensive damage. Among Halifax-bound ship: which escaped were the Canadian Exporter, which arrived with icargo of woolens and other Brit- .ish goods, and the rescue ‘Bury. ‘hlircxichmcn to fight with the Ger- mini w". nt. LAVAL PREPARES __ lCP) - Pierre onetime Premier of the Government is preparing his defence plea in a Sgizmish jail. and the plea contains the admission that Laval was wrong in asking mans against Russia), according to the French daily newspaper “Lib- on.’ erotl i -.Cmd1'. W.H i and Summersidc Russia Fir 0n Veto Stand BY C11. BLACKBURN SAN FRANCESCO, June 6 - (CP) —— Russia summoned a meeting of the Big Five late today, giving rise to hopes some break might be im- minent in the deadlock over vfio powers, but Soviet sources subse- quen-lly indicated there would be no “weakening of the Russian stand on this question. , Officials in a position to knnw said that. Russia considers the Y ltd agreement gives any of the B": Five the rlfflht t’) veto even disc slorl of an international dispute in a world security council, and des- pite urgings of the rifvr big pOWTS, is standing on this interpretation CANADIAN N AVAL- (C0pt1nuiqi_ iz-om Page l) vessels which the Ptoynl Navy {ill d over 1.0 Canada's lllllS.ll'i).)lll... ~ force before and curly lll in.» \ were hezaded by the llOILiiLl l: 5r Assinlbolne, under inc coznznnizd oi‘ Cmdr. E L. Armstrong, R C.N of Toronto. Gatineau was Cmdr. Gil. Dario on, Victoria, Sas-knicliet'.'nii Cmdr. T C. Pull-m. R C N , Or‘;- vllle, Ont, and Kooieizry by L: - \Vill°0n, R.C N , D.S.C. of Calgary Lt-Cmdr. Pull is Cmdr. Hugh Pnl officer of the Uganda. Ville de Que-bet. one of the il"si Canadian corvettcs to bllf; n slb in this War, headed the group “finch reached port today Her flipper is Lt-Czncir. ‘H C. Hatch of Windsor. On . sm. oi Canadian racing mvncr H C Ilntr-h whose Uttermost coppcd the King's Plate this year. Al-Sorna is captained by Lieu‘. N Pinlaysosi. R C.N V R . of Vrn- oouver, Moose Jaw A. Harvey, RC NV.R of .c l..nd, by Licut. Frank Plnna. R C N V R , 0i Oirrsa. The other corvette in the group Baddeok. is under the command of Lieut. D I-I. Toner of ltivnt-real The destroyers. operating as, o5- eort Bivuf) 1!. vwro the last flos- C. troyer group enzrrrd in sub-hunt- im! at. the end of “M W1" in Rtlrnce, . -..-...._ . _ _. ._3 You get looking, eshing n shaves in no time with the Blue Gillette Blade that's because it has the keenest smoothest-finished. edges ever produced ltprgys f0 ask for Blue Gillette B For extra shaving luxury prepare your beard with Gillettélshavin Lcfealn e e e 33K”,